Monday, April 17, 2017

Actress Bimbo Akintola Full Biography

INTRODUCTION
Bimbo Akintola is a popular Nigerian actress, known for Smoke & Mirrors (2008), Beyond the Verdict 2 (2007) and Beyond the Verdict (2007) and many more..

EARLY LIFE AND BACKGROUND

Akintola was born on 5 May 1970 to a father from Oyo State and a mother from Edo State. She had her primary education at Maryland Convent Private School, Maryland, Lagos State. She proceeded to Command Day Secondary School, Lagos. She earned a degree in Theater Arts from University of Ibadan.

Bimbo Akintola is one of the most versatile character in the Nollywood Movie Industry and is very easy going. She is the third child of a family of six and a native of Oyo State, Nigeria. She started acting as a pupil with her peers for the school’s end-of-year drama events. As she took part in more plays, her passion for acting grew and became effortless with time.

SPEAKING ON HER BACKGROUND IN AN INTERVIEW:How did your acting career begin?My mum told me I had always
been dramatic, since I was very young. So maybe it began from that time.
She said one way or the other, I was always involved in acting. When I
was in secondary school, I was also into dancing and at a point, I
joined the choir, even though I didn’t stay long. I don’t think any
profession would have appealed to me apart from acting. Even the other
things I do, like singing, writing poems, etc., are hobbies. Acting is
one thing I’m extremely passionate about. When I chose Theatre Arts as
the course I wanted to study in University of Ibadan, my dad didn’t
understand it for a while. He just felt you can’t make money from doing
stuffs like that. He felt why not go and study something else so I could
have a degree I could fall back on. I was a stubborn child, so I said
no, I must study Theatre Arts and I did. He finally agreed with me.What fond memories of growing up do you still have?Growing
up was fun. My mum got married at about 17, and at 18 she had her first
child. As a young mother, she was a disciplinarian but loving. My dad
was a Customs officer and he was posted to different places, so he only
came home on weekends or fortnightly. Then, in the evening, we would sit
outside in the balcony and my mum would tell us stories and teach us
songs. And anytime she was cooking, everybody; male or female, would
have to be in the kitchen with her. While cooking she would be singing
and we had to join her as well. I was a tomboy and I liked to climb
trees and jump fences. As a result, I always had bruises on my chin. My
mum just couldn’t understand it so I was chastised every day. Over time,
she couldn’t stop me from climbing trees, because I was a real tomboy.
After a while, she got used to it.

CAREER AND LIFE

Her debut acting was when she featured in the film OWO BLOW in 1995 alongside Femi Adebayo and followed up with Out of Bounds in 1997 with Richard Mofe Damijo a movie which she was awarded the Best Actress/English Actress in Nigeria. She was nominated for Best Actress in a Leading role at the 2013 Nollywood Movies Awards.

She has also appeared in many popular movies such as The Mourning After, Out of Bounds, Diamond Ring, Dangerous Twins, 93days and 90Ninth Day.

Some reports online even rank you as one of the top actresses who can’t do without smoking. Does it bother you sometimes?

I’m
not bothered. Anybody can write whatever they like. And this has been
happening for the last 20 years. I have read many stories about myself
online that I don’t even know the person they are talking about. I’m not
bothered because I know who I am; my parents know who I am; my family
and friends know who I am and when people who don’t know me meet me and
have a conversation with me, they change their mind. So, I’m okay with
that. There was a time I was outside the country and some persons wrote
that I was in Ogba doing something funny. I laughed deeply. And that was
about 15 years ago. The truth of the matter is that people want to read
weird, funny stories and unfortunately, there is a huge base for
stories like that everywhere in the world. So, that is why stories like
that would never end. So, I’m not bothered.SPEAKING MORE ON HER PERSONAL LIFE IN A 2017 INTERVIEW:A lot has been
said about your love life and some have said you should be married by
now. Would you say the society is mounting pressure on you as regards
marriage?I guess these questions arise because of the
country we live in and the kind of people we are. It’s also something I
think we need to look at critically, because it seems we are creating
more trouble for people, as marriages are now crashing within six months
or even less. This is partly because the society puts a lot of pressure
on people to get married. Shouldn’t we take a step backward and ask
ourselves what we are doing wrong. It’s not about how soon, but how
well? I think it’s time we realised that marriage is such a serious
thing. Shouldn’t we allow people make their choices by themselves,
without pressure? Parents should stop putting pressure on their
children. Many women are divorced now and in some cases, there is
serious fight and both of them would be fighting over the custody of the
child. We need to start changing the way we look at marriage. It’s
important we get married but marry at your own time.You once
said you love kids, and with the way people are embracing the option of
child out of wedlock, popularly called baby mama, is it something you
could do?Of course, I can. Definitely I can do it because I
don’t see anything wrong with it. Things are changing in the world at
large. If you look around, you would find a lot of women are having
babies and taking care of themselves. It’s everywhere. There are women
who are not actors but are single mothers, and for a lot of people I
think it’s about their biological clock. Instead of waiting for manna
from heaven and you know there is no manna, and you feel the need to
have children, then do it.

As a good-looking woman, how often do men approach you?(Laughs…)
Every day that I go out. It’s a normal thing every day; from younger
men, to people of same age and of course older men. It’s a regular
thing. If it is not happening, you have to worry about yourself. Because
of what we do, people want to date actors.

Can you date an actor?I’ve
been in the entertainment industry for over 20 years, so there is
nobody I want to date in the industry, except such persons have not come
into the industry yet. I know everybody and there is nobody I’m
interested in dating. That is the truth. Most of them are like my
brothers, and maybe it’s because of the work, because when I’m working,
those things don’t even occur to me, so by the time work is over, I
already see you as a brother or colleague. For me, I have never been
interested in any actor. Never!

If you work closely with someone
for a length of time, are you saying you have never had feelings for any
actor in the line of dutyNever! It has never happened to me,
personally. I don’t look at anyone except from the angle of the
character the person is representing. I could talk with the person
before or after, but at that point, you are probably entering the
brother or friend zone. I’ve worked with the finest men in the industry
and I have not felt anything like that before. I worked with RMD, and
that was even when I had just started acting. I worked with Ramsey
Nouah, Desmond Elliot, Emeka Ike, Kanayo Kanayo, Fred Amata, etc. they
are all like my friends and brothers. Even the directors, like Jimi
Odumosu, Lancelot Imasuen are like my brothers. So, for me, I have never
had an attraction for an actors

She's been involved in so many controversies in her life time one of the most popular ones is the rumor she got married to another actor Yemi Blaq, a report which was later debunked and put to rest.